Trains.com

Alco... And Then Came Pearl Harbour

3019 views
19 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Alco... And Then Came Pearl Harbour
Posted by Miningman on Saturday, March 9, 2019 1:38 PM
The incredible and magnificient story of Alco during War
  • Member since
    January 2019
  • From: Henrico, VA
  • 9,571 posts
Posted by Flintlock76 on Saturday, March 9, 2019 2:16 PM

ALCO referring to World War Two as their third  war?  I don't know, ALCO didn't come into existance until 1901 when seven locomotive builders merged to form it.  I'm assuming they're referring to the Schenectady Locomotive Works, one of the seven and the oldest, going into business in 1848.  It certainly was a "Big Shop."

No matter, ALCO did a hell of a job during WW2, as did all American industry.  

NDG
  • Member since
    December 2013
  • 1,605 posts
Posted by NDG on Saturday, March 9, 2019 3:25 PM

 

For the War, in another Country.
 
From Alco-GE, December 1941. 69824.
 
 
Canadian Arsenals No. 5.  Montreal.
 

Thank You.

  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Posted by Miningman on Saturday, March 9, 2019 9:03 PM

It is truly astonishing what Alco did in WWII.

Thousands of tanks, thousands of guns, thousands of several hundred other items from Scotch boilers to Battleship gun turrets roller bearings. Changing production on the fly. After building 6,000 Sherman tanks they had to switch to steam locomotives, over a thousand of them. Designing and building a locomotive for Iranian Railways in harsh conditions  to supply Russia and augment Murmansk convoys. You could say Alco saved Stalins sorry butt. 

Not only all that and so much more untold, they even used tens of millions of their own money trusting their know how and workforce. 

I simply have a hard time getting my head around the amount of steel and other materials that had to be delivered and all the logistics of that during wartime in a already busy nation. It must have been an incredible place with incredible departments from design to accounting. 

Lets not forget the streetcars, interurbans and commuter trains that brought shift after shift a workforce to war around the clock. 

And....all this without computers and instant communication. Could our societies do this today at the drop of a hat without those aids?  

The greatest generation ever.

  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 24,934 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Saturday, March 9, 2019 9:36 PM

Miningman
It is truly astonishing what Alco did in WWII.

Thousands of tanks, thousands of guns, thousands of several hundred other items from Scotch boilers to Battleship gun turrets roller bearings. Changing production on the fly. After building 6,000 Sherman tanks they had to switch to steam locomotives, over a thousand of them. Designing and building a locomotive for Iranian Railways in harsh conditions  to supply Russia and augment Murmansk convoys. You could say Alco saved Stalins sorry butt. 

Not only all that and so much more untold, they even used tens of millions of their own money trusting their know how and workforce. 

I simply have a hard time getting my head around the amount of steel and other materials that had to be delivered and all the logistics of that during wartime in a already busy nation. It must have been an incredible place with incredible departments from design to accounting. 

Lets not forget the streetcars, interurbans and commuter trains that brought shift after shift a workforce to war around the clock. 

And....all this without computers and instant communication. Could our societies do this today at the drop of a hat without those aids?  

The greatest generation ever.

Were a war requiring heavy manufacturing abilities in mass quantities to break out today - the Western Hemisphere countries would be defeated before anything could be ramped up.

We don't posses a steel industry, I'm not so sure what kind of Aluminum industry still exist, machine skills outside of CAD/CAM by and large no longer exist and I have my wonders how people are being trained in the CAD/CAM enviornment.  Destroy Cell towers and communications will grind to unreliability.

One thing WW II tapped in the Western Hemisphere was women in the work force - a work force 'boost' that had never been considered possible prior to the war but something that was done out of necessity - you can't draft millions of men into the armed forces without having people to replace their place in the producing economy.

I guess the statement could be made that Hitler & Hiro Hito started the revolution of women in the general work force.  The law of unintended consequences.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    April 2018
  • 1,618 posts
Posted by Jones1945 on Sunday, March 10, 2019 7:05 AM

  • Member since
    July 2016
  • 2,549 posts
Posted by Backshop on Sunday, March 10, 2019 8:10 AM

BaltACD
 

Were a war requiring heavy manufacturing abilities in mass quantities to break out today - the Western Hemisphere countries would be defeated before anything could be ramped up.

 

 

 

Any war against a major power would be a "run what ya brung" affair.  Weapons are too sophisticated to be mass produced by manual labor.
  • Member since
    May 2003
  • From: US
  • 24,934 posts
Posted by BaltACD on Sunday, March 10, 2019 9:07 AM

Presuming that the 'first punch' is not a knock out - additional weapons will ned to be produced and produced in quantity.  What will need to produce those weapons in quantity and in time?  Increased level of raw materials and a increased level machine work and assembly, will at least create needs for the 'robots' that do it all.  Will the robots build themselves?  Will the Process Controls control all the aspects of increased levels of materials required.  Will AI destroy the human race?

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

  • Member since
    July 2016
  • 2,549 posts
Posted by Backshop on Sunday, March 10, 2019 11:38 AM

In today's world, it's more important where your electronics are manufactured.  They are the expensive and time consuming element of military equipment.  Every first world country is in the same predicament.  It really doesn't matter how many you can produce if you can't afford to buy in quantity.

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • 1,601 posts
Posted by Erik_Mag on Sunday, March 10, 2019 1:08 PM

During WW1, Baldwin produced 5 rail mounted 14 inch naval rifles, going from order to deployment in under 9 months. Inital range firng in France placed three rounds within a 150 foot square at 14 miles.

A couple of things helped the US during WW2. First was that the machine tool industry was jump started by orders from France and the UK ca 1938 as the "high speed" cutting tools made older machine tools obsolete. Second the machine tool industry made a push to get people trained on using machine tools in the 1940-41 time period, so there was a trained workforce when fighting started.

What was unfortunate for Alco was that their manufacturing focus during WW@ had little to do with improving their diesel engines. EMD's engines were widely used by the USN, so there was a concerted effort to make improvements on the 567. Had the 244 been as reliable as the 567, the Alco PA would have dominated the post-war passenger market and the freight locomotives would have been a lot more competitive with the EMD products.

  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Posted by Miningman on Sunday, March 10, 2019 2:02 PM
  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Posted by Miningman on Sunday, March 10, 2019 2:37 PM

Speaking of Service to the Nation it is Mikes birthday today!

 

Trouble viewing this message?  Click Here
 
VFW VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS.
MAIN BANNER
 
 

Dear Michael,

Happy Birthday from the VFW!

We're honored to count you among our esteemed members — and we wish you all the best on your special day. However you celebrate, please know how grateful we are for your membership. Most importantly, we thank you for your service to this great nation. 

May the year ahead be filled with success and happiness. 

Sincerely,

The VFW Membership Team

  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Posted by Miningman on Sunday, March 10, 2019 9:37 PM

 

  • Member since
    December 2017
  • From: I've been everywhere, man
  • 4,259 posts
Posted by SD70Dude on Sunday, March 10, 2019 9:44 PM

Erik_Mag

What was unfortunate for Alco was that their manufacturing focus during WW@ had little to do with improving their diesel engines. EMD's engines were widely used by the USN, so there was a concerted effort to make improvements on the 567. Had the 244 been as reliable as the 567, the Alco PA would have dominated the post-war passenger market and the freight locomotives would have been a lot more competitive with the EMD products.

What a lot of railfans and historians so easily forget today is just how many changes were made to the 567 in the years after its introduction, the very early versions of that engine were not all that reliable.  There are very few unaltered 567 U, V, A and B engines left running today. 

It took until the C-block redesign (entered production in 1953) for the 567 to become a highly reliable machine.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

  • Member since
    January 2019
  • From: Henrico, VA
  • 9,571 posts
Posted by Flintlock76 on Sunday, March 10, 2019 9:55 PM

Happy birthday Mike!  Thanks for your service, soldier!  

  • Member since
    January 2002
  • 4,612 posts
Posted by M636C on Monday, March 11, 2019 4:22 AM

SD70Dude
 
Erik_Mag

What was unfortunate for Alco was that their manufacturing focus during WW@ had little to do with improving their diesel engines. EMD's engines were widely used by the USN, so there was a concerted effort to make improvements on the 567. Had the 244 been as reliable as the 567, the Alco PA would have dominated the post-war passenger market and the freight locomotives would have been a lot more competitive with the EMD products.

 

 

What a lot of railfans and historians so easily forget today is just how many changes were made to the 567 in the years after its introduction, the very early versions of that engine were not all that reliable.  There are very few unaltered 567 U, V, A and B engines left running today. 

It took until the C-block redesign (entered production in 1953) for the 567 to become a highly reliable machine.

 

But it was the 567B that the railroads bought instead of the 244. The 567B had most of the improvements in the 567C apart from the water jackets on the cylinder liners which were fed from "water jumpers" from piping rather than water jackets in the crankcase itself.

The problem being addressed in the 567B was leakage of cooling water past seals into the cylinder through the inlet ports where the piston was below the inlet ports when the engine was stopped and cooling down.

A simple solution to this was to leave the engine idling and keeping the locomotive on the road as much as possible. The Victorian Railways addressed the problem by removing the shutdown button and only permitting mechanics rather than loco crew to shut down the locomotive. I think the Commonwealth Railways had much the same idea. There were only 36 locomotives in Australia with 567B engines and all of these were modified to 567BC in Australia by Clyde Engineering.

Ironically, the water jumpers to cylinder liner were based on those used on the Alco 244, which were not used in the succeeding 251 which had conventional water jackets. Of course there were no inlet ports in Alco's four stroke engines so water leaks had to occur elsewhere.

One of the problems with the early 244 was the air cooled turbocharger, provided by GE and this was replaced by by a conventional water cooled  turbocharger built in-house by Alco. But there were many other early problems, such as crankshaft bearing failures. There were also inherent design problems such the connecting rod big end being too big to fit through the cylinder liner.

Basically neither Alco nor GE had the resources that GM Research were able to apply to the problems of the 201A and later the 567, not just intellectual but also financial. I don't think anyone predicted that the 710, clearly developed from the original 567, would be able meet Tier III emission requirements, but doing so proved a great benefit to EMD and the railroads.

The Alco was as commercially successful as the EMD in Australia even after Alco closed and support and design moved to MLW. This was possibly due to the railways being run by state governments who kept large well staffed workshops well into the diesel era but also due to Alco's significantly lower fuel consumption in a country where all oil was imported. It was EMD's better electronics from the Dash 2 onward and the even greater reliability that finally changed the situation but only after 1980.

Peter

  • Member since
    September 2003
  • 21,326 posts
Posted by Overmod on Monday, March 11, 2019 11:57 AM

M636C
... there were many other early problems, such as crankshaft bearing failures. There were also inherent design problems such the connecting rod big end being too big to fit through the cylinder liner.

Do you happen to remember the change -- I recall it as being a firing-order change -- that was necessary to stop the crank breakages on the 16-cylinder engines?  As well as what was involved, other than a new cam, to implement that?

  • Member since
    January 2002
  • 4,612 posts
Posted by M636C on Tuesday, March 12, 2019 8:23 PM

Overmod

 

 
M636C
... there were many other early problems, such as crankshaft bearing failures. There were also inherent design problems such the connecting rod big end being too big to fit through the cylinder liner.

 

Do you happen to remember the change -- I recall it as being a firing-order change -- that was necessary to stop the crank breakages on the 16-cylinder engines?  As well as what was involved, other than a new cam, to implement that?

I hadn't heard that the firing order was changed.

It seems quite likely. EMD has done that twice at least, the 8-567C to the 8-567CR and the 12-710G3A to the 12N-710G3B...

Eugene Kettering's ASME paper on the 567 (found at Utah Rails) has an excellent diagram of torsional vibration against engine speed showing the eight throttle notches which explains a lot....

Steinbrenner talks about the problems with the 12-244 and the need to replace many crankshafts but this is attributed to faulty manufacture, (including an entire batch of cast crankshafts). Another cause was insufficient rigidity in the lower crankcase where the bearing supports could become misaligned.

All of these could apply to the 16-244 magnified by the longer crankshaft. But a change in the firing order is also possible, I just hadn't heard of it.

I expect that the significant changes would have been incorporated in the 2250HP engine, the final versions being 2400HP just before the 251 replaced it.

Peter

  • Member since
    January 2002
  • 4,612 posts
Posted by M636C on Tuesday, March 12, 2019 11:39 PM

Miningman

Speaking of Service to the Nation it is Mikes birthday today!

 

Trouble viewing this message?  Click Here
 
VFW VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS.
MAIN BANNER
 
 

Dear Michael,

Happy Birthday from the VFW!

We're honored to count you among our esteemed members — and we wish you all the best on your special day. However you celebrate, please know how grateful we are for your membership. Most importantly, we thank you for your service to this great nation. 

May the year ahead be filled with success and happiness. 

Sincerely,

The VFW Membership Team

 

 
I felt that I should add my own greetings from Australia, where I am siiting at my desk in my white summer uniform (I'm taking a break from pretty boring work this morning...) I miss seeing Mike's contributions on many subjects.
 
I thought I would make a comment about the different way things are expressed in Australia and the USA. The equivalent organisation in Australia to the VFW is the "Returned Soldiers', Sailors' and Airmen's Imperial League of Australia", more commonly referred to as the "Returned Servicemen's League" or RSL. Because so many went to the First World War, and despite horrific losses, many returned, there were RSL clubs in nearly every community, often located  near to the community war memorial, most of which needed alteration by 1945 to add to the list of names. Today of course Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan need to be commemorated as well.
 
But in Australia, the word "returned" serves instead of "foreign wars". To have "returned", you must have fought overseas....
 
These days the organisation is open to almost anyone, but for years those who had served only within Australia were not admitted.
 
Peter
  • Member since
    September 2013
  • 6,199 posts
Posted by Miningman on Thursday, March 14, 2019 9:03 PM

SUBSCRIBER & MEMBER LOGIN

Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!

FREE NEWSLETTER SIGNUP

Get the Classic Trains twice-monthly newsletter